• Thumbnail for Tutelo
    The Tutelo (also Totero, Totteroy, Tutera; Yesan in Tutelo) were Native American people living above the Fall Line in present-day Virginia and West Virginia...
    11 KB (1,311 words) - 02:18, 22 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tutelo language
    Tutelo, also known as Tutelo–Saponi, is a member of the Virginian branch of Siouan languages that were originally spoken in what is now Virginia and West...
    13 KB (977 words) - 00:24, 3 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Saponi
    related to the languages of the Tutelo, Biloxi, and Ofo. They were part of the Monacan confederacies. Saponi, Tutelo, and Yesang were collectively called...
    21 KB (2,231 words) - 14:49, 8 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Siouan languages
    Dhegihan languages), and Ohio Valley Siouan languages (Ofo, Biloxi, and Tutelo). The Catawban branch consisting of Catawban and Woccon. Charles F. Voegelin...
    14 KB (1,333 words) - 18:59, 13 September 2024
  • other Siouan-speaking tribes of the inland in this region, such as the Tutelo, Saponi and Occaneechi. When Jamestown settlers first explored the James...
    18 KB (2,174 words) - 17:22, 31 July 2024
  • The group has Ofo and Biloxi, in the Lower Mississippi River valley, and Tutelo, historically spoken in Virginia, near the territory of the Catawban languages...
    2 KB (276 words) - 19:52, 2 July 2023
  • Thumbnail for Beckley, West Virginia
    Monacan people. The Moneton's Catawba speaking neighbors to the south, the Tutelo (since absorbed into the Seneca-Cayuga Nation) may have absorbed surviving...
    31 KB (2,687 words) - 22:11, 9 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for American English
    Quapaw Stoney Winnebago Biloxi Catawba Chiwere Mitchigamea Moneton Ofo Tutelo-Saponi Woccon Tanoan Jemez Kiowa Picuris Southern Tiwa Taos Tewa Piro Pueblo...
    83 KB (9,048 words) - 12:16, 17 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for New York (state)
    Confederacy offered shelter to refugees of the Mascouten, Erie, Chonnonton, Tutelo, Saponi, and Tuscarora nations. The Tuscarora became the sixth nation of...
    215 KB (20,220 words) - 17:53, 24 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Manahoac
    Mountains. They united with the Monacan, the Occaneechi, the Saponi and the Tutelo. They disappeared from the historical record after 1728 due of introduction...
    12 KB (1,387 words) - 03:38, 4 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Occaneechi
    diseases, the Saponi and Tutelo came to live near the Occaneechi on adjacent islands. By 1714 the Occaneechi moved to join the Tutelo, Saponi, and other Siouan...
    17 KB (2,184 words) - 04:29, 27 August 2024
  • Quebec had a mission to convert the Cayuga as early as 1657. Saponi and Tutelo peoples, Siouan-speaking tribes, later occupied lands at the south end of...
    99 KB (9,766 words) - 21:38, 7 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Į
    Sekani, Tagish, Tlingit, Tutchone, Winnebago, Assiniboine, Mandan, Osage, Tutelo, Catawba, and Ixtlán Zapotec. In Lithuanian, it is the 14th letter of the...
    3 KB (208 words) - 21:21, 22 September 2024
  • largest Council-owned Scout reservation in the United States. The council's Tutelo Lodge is part of the Order of the Arrow. The council was formed in 1972...
    20 KB (2,428 words) - 01:46, 5 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Navajo language
    Quapaw Stoney Winnebago Biloxi Catawba Chiwere Mitchigamea Moneton Ofo Tutelo-Saponi Woccon Tanoan Jemez Kiowa Picuris Southern Tiwa Taos Tewa Piro Pueblo...
    74 KB (7,406 words) - 11:20, 1 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for North Carolina
    Frank G. (1935). "Siouan Tribes of the Carolinas as Known from Catawba, Tutelo, and Documentary Sources". American Anthropologist. 37 (2): 201–225. doi:10...
    231 KB (20,214 words) - 05:41, 30 September 2024
  • Nikonha (category Tutelo)
    Waskiteng and Mosquito, (b. ca. 1765- d. 1871, Tutelo) was known as the last full-blooded speaker of Tutelo, a Virginia Siouan language. He is reported to...
    5 KB (626 words) - 09:27, 30 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Virginia
    Iroquoian-speaking Nottoway and Meherrin to the north and south, and the Tutelo, who spoke Siouan, to the west. In response to threats from these other...
    299 KB (26,594 words) - 02:15, 30 September 2024
  • Aramaic. Tutelo went extinct in 1982, leading most Monacans, Saponi, and Occaneechi to speak English. There has been some interest in reviving Tutelo in the...
    415 KB (3,623 words) - 13:50, 30 September 2024
  • Occaneechi dialect of the Tutelo language served as a lingua franca in the land that would become the state of Virginia. Tutelo was a Siouan language. But...
    76 KB (9,739 words) - 21:27, 30 July 2024
  • Quapaw Stoney Winnebago Biloxi Catawba Chiwere Mitchigamea Moneton Ofo Tutelo-Saponi Woccon Tanoan Jemez Kiowa Picuris Southern Tiwa Taos Tewa Piro Pueblo...
    77 KB (8,916 words) - 23:39, 24 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Roanoke, Virginia
    The Roanoke Valley was originally home to members of the Siouan-speaking Tutelo tribe. However, in the 17th and early-to-mid 18th centuries, Scotch-Irish...
    144 KB (13,288 words) - 13:31, 23 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Bell Canada
    Bell conducted his early telephone experiments from his father's home in Tutelo Heights, Ontario, and also building some 2,398 telephones to Bell's specifications...
    45 KB (4,652 words) - 02:58, 3 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Western Siouan languages
    on ongoing revival Quapaw – 1 speaker Ohio Valley Siouan Virginia Siouan Tutelo † Moneton † Mississippi Siouan Biloxi † Ofo † (†) – Extinct language Another...
    6 KB (504 words) - 08:55, 3 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Horatio Hale
    trace their migrations. Hale was the first to analyze and confirm that the Tutelo language of some Virginia Native Americans belonged to the Siouan family...
    16 KB (1,758 words) - 20:32, 20 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for West Virginia
    Kentucky and extending an unknown distance inland, and the Eastern Siouan Tutelo and Moneton tribes in the southeast. There was also the Iroquoian Susquehannock...
    185 KB (18,219 words) - 13:14, 29 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Keyauwee Indians
    constantly joined with other tribes for better protection. They joined with the Tutelo, Saponi, Occaneechi, and the Shakori tribes, moving to the Albemarle Sound...
    7 KB (724 words) - 02:35, 28 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Maryland
    subdivisions), the Powhatan, the Lenape, the Susquehannock, the Shawnee, the Tutelo, the Saponi, the Pocomoke and the Massawomeck.[self-published source?] George...
    216 KB (18,715 words) - 17:09, 28 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tecumseh's confederacy
    followers from many different tribes, including the Shawnee, Chickamauga, Tutelo, Ojibwe/Chippewa, Mascouten, and Potawatomi. Willig (1997) argues that Tippecanoe...
    18 KB (2,230 words) - 13:54, 8 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mingo
    Iroquoian-speaking Seneca, Wyandot, and Susquehannock; Siouan-language speaking Tutelo and Algonquian-language Shawnee and Delaware migrants. Although the Iroquois...
    10 KB (1,201 words) - 14:04, 23 May 2024